alluvial mining
Alluvial Mining
Most of the diamond deposits first discovered were alluvial -- concentrations in streambed or riverbed sand and gravel. They are still actively exploited in many ways, from the most primitive to the highly sophisticated. The goal is relatively simple: to find a location where moving water has deposited diamonds in the bottom of a channel, possibly in a pocket or cleft. Because rivers meander and drainage can change, fossilizing a once active river, the search for alluvial diamonds requires some geological knowledge and a lot of luck. The process involves removing the overlying barren ground, digging up the bearing ground, extracting the diamonds, and, nowadays, restoring the landscape when finished.
In the most basic,
individual operations,
such as in Sierra Leone or Angola, the technology involves shovel and
pan,
with some hand sloshing to gravitate diamond to the bottom of the pan;
the eye is the ultimate sorting device. Mom-and-pop operations in South
Africa involve a small claim and utilize limited technology -- shovels,
buckets, jury-rigged cranes powered by small vehicles, and the like --
to load a small washing pan. The concentrate is then sieved into
several
size ranges, and each fraction is dumped onto a picking table, where
someone
checks by eye for diamonds. In the bigger operations, as shown in the
model,
large earth-moving equipment transports the alluvium, and the
processing
approaches that of the primary mines -- coarse sieving, then rotary
sieving
in a trommel, before loading into a large washing pan. Final processing
includes concentrate sieving, a picking table, and usually a grease
table.
Of course, no crushing is required, as nature has already released the
diamonds from the pipe rock.